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Cannabis

Preventing Memory Loss With Marijuana

Some parts of the brain respond positively to regular cannabis exposure.

Key points

  • Recent investigations have shown that stimulating the brain’s cannabinoid receptors may be protective.
  • The contents of cannabis may offer protection from the effects of stroke, chronic pain, and inflammation.
  • Cannabis may restore neurogenesis and neuroplasticity in the aging brain by reducing inflammation.

Can smoking marijuana prevent the memory loss associated with normal aging or Alzheimer’s disease? This is a topic that scientists have been investigating for the past few years. The concept of medical marijuana is not a new one. A Chinese pharmacy book, written in about 2737 BCE, was probably the first to mention its use as a medicine for the treatment of gout, rheumatism, malaria, constipation, and (ironically) absent-mindedness.

So what does marijuana do in the brain? It produces some excitatory behavioral changes, including euphoria, but it is not generally regarded as a stimulant. It can also produce some sedative effects but not to the extent of a barbiturate or alcohol. It produces mild analgesic effects (pain relief) as well, but this action is not related pharmacologically to the pain-relieving effects of opiates or aspirin.

Finally, marijuana produces hallucinations at high doses, but its structure does not resemble LSD or any other hallucinogen. Thus, marijuana’s effects on our body and brain are complex. Just how does it achieve these effects, and are they beneficial? The chemicals contained within the marijuana plant cross the blood–brain barrier and bind to a receptor for the brain’s very own endogenous marijuana neurotransmitter system. If this were not true, then the marijuana plant would be popular only for its use in making rope, paper, and cloth.

The first endogenous marijuana compound found in the brain was called anandamide, from the Sanskrit word ananda meaning "bliss." Anandamide interacts with specific receptor proteins to affect brain function. The great abundance of these receptors gives an indication of the importance of the endogenous system in the regulation of the brain’s normal functioning. Recent investigations have also shown that stimulating the brain’s marijuana receptors may offer protection from the consequences of stroke, chronic pain, and neuroinflammation (Laws et al., 2022).

Surprisingly, it may also protect against some aspects of age-associated memory loss. Ordinarily, we do not view marijuana as being good for our brain and certainly not for making memories. How could a drug that clearly impairs memory while people are under its sway protect their brains from the consequences of aging? The answer likely has everything to do with the way that young and old brains function and a series of age-related changes in brain chemistry. When we are young, stimulating the brain’s marijuana receptors interferes with making memories. However, later in life, the brain gradually displays increasing evidence of inflammation and a dramatic decline in the production of new neurons, called neurogenesis, that are important for making new memories (Duncan et al., 2024).

Research has demonstrated that stimulating the brain’s marijuana receptors may offer protection by reducing brain inflammation and by restoring neurogenesis. Thus, later in life, marijuana might actually help your brain, rather than harm it. Cannabis products may offer benefits for a variety of central nervous system diseases and dysfunctions such as forms of epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, and some neuropsychiatric disorders. It may require very little daily cannabis consumption to produce benefits in the older brain; it appears as though only a single puff each day is necessary to produce significant benefit. The challenge for pharmacologists in the future will be to isolate the beneficial effects of the marijuana plant from its psychoactive effects.

References

Duncan RS et al., (2024) Cannabinoids and endocannabinoids as therapeutics for nervous system disorders: preclinical models and clinical studies. Neural Regeneration Res, 19:788–799, DOI10.4103/1673-5374.382220

Wenk GL, "Your Brain on Food: How Chemicals Control Your Thoughts and Feelings," 3rd Ed. Oxford University Press.

Laws JS et al., (2022) Evaluating Cannabis sativa L.'s neuroprotection potential: From bench to bedside. Phytomedicine, 07, DOI10.1016/j.phymed.2022.154485

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